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"Living" and "Dead" Water: What Is It Really?

3 Feb, 2026, No comments

The terms "living" and "dead" water are often found in health articles and advertisements for various devices. But if you strip away the marketing fluff and the fairy-tale names — which simply mask different levels of water saturation with free electrons — we see a specific physico-chemical indicator: Oxidation-Reduction Potential (ORP).

Let’s find out if it's worth chasing the "charge" and why high-quality filtered water is the best thing you can give your body.

1. How It Works: The Physics of the Process

To understand the properties of water, scientists measure its ability to donate or accept electrons. This determines whether the liquid is an oxidant or a reducer (antioxidant).

  • Positive reading: so-called "dead water" This includes ordinary tap water or bottled water. Chemically, it is stable, but it is considered an "oxidant" because it lacks free electrons.
  • Negative reading: so-called "living water" This is water saturated with free electrons (for example, due to active hydrogen). In nature, it is extremely rare and found only in specific, hard-to-reach sources.

2. Debunking the Myth: Why Osmosis is NOT "Dead Water"

The biggest misconception in recent years is calling ideally pure water from a reverse osmosis system "dead." This is a fundamentally incorrect statement.

  • Purity is a benefit, not a harm. Reverse osmosis removes 99% of dangerous impurities: bacteria, viruses, heavy metals, chlorine, and pesticides. Calling such water "dead" just because it lacks a "charge" or mineral salts is a massive mistake.
  • Safety first. Our body gets the vast majority of its necessary minerals from food, not water. The main task of drinking water is to be a clean solvent, free of toxins.
  • Neutrality is the natural norm. Water purified by a filter has neutral indicators. It doesn't "drain energy"; on the contrary, it is the lightest and most physiological water for absorption.

Conclusion: Using a high-quality filter makes water safe. Purified water is a living resource for your metabolism, completely freed from dangerous chemical "baggage."

3. Where Does the "Charge" Come From and Is It Necessary?

It is popularly believed that so-called "living water" (with negative potential) helps fight aging. Various methods are used to produce it: from adding magnesium to special generators.

However, it is important to remain objective:

  1. Natural instability: In a natural environment, water with a negative potential is practically non-existent in a stable form and loses its properties very quickly when in contact with air.
  2. Scientific status: Although laboratory experiments show certain antioxidant properties, serious clinical studies on humans are still ongoing. The usefulness of this concept has not yet been fully studied and is not a proven medical fact.  

4. What should you drink in the end?

Don't panic or believe the myths that filtered water "leaches calcium" or is somehow deficient. These are nothing more than marketing ploys.

The gold standard today is:

  • Deep Purification: Using reverse osmosis systems to remove all "chemicals" and microorganisms.
  • Basic Mineralization: If you prefer a familiar taste, modern systems come equipped with mineralizing cartridges.
  • Common Sense: The purity of the water and the absence of contaminants are far more important than its mythical "charge."

Summary

What people commonly call "living" and "dead" water is merely an attempt to simplify complex chemistry. While science is only beginning to study the effects of altered water potential on humans, one indisputable fact remains: clean, filtered water is the foundation of your health. Any methods of additional "charging" are just experimental techniques whose effectiveness has yet to be proven.


Do you need a water filter? How to avoid buying too much?

23 Aug, 2025, No comments
Do you need water purification?
Let's say you are going to live in a new house or already live there and you have
doubts about the quality of tap water. It doesn't matter where the water comes from
- from your own well, tap, well or central water supply.
The quality of tap water can vary. From completely clean drinking water, 
which is unfortunately rare for various reasons.
Or there are signs of contamination in the water. In this case, of course, 
you need to have the water analyzed in an independent laboratory.

How important are these pollutants to your needs?

But everyone has different goals:

Some people need drinking water from every tap in the house,
others need water for irrigation and it doesn't matter what's in it: hardness, 
hydrogen sulfide, iron, nitrates... the main thing is that there is no iron, for example..
It should be understood that there are three types of water pollution: organoleptic,
toxic and microbiological. It is easier to judge by organoleptics (determined by the senses)
- they are perceived (odor, turbidity, deposits, dry skin, etc.)
Toxic substances are pollutants that do not manifest themselves in water.
Nitrites, arsenic, radon, heavy metals and various organic substances.
They are not dangerous for household water, but drinking water simply must be clean!
Therefore, we recommend using a filter for drinking water
Reverse osmosis to remove toxic impurities. It deeply purifies the water and makes it
absolutely clean, no matter what it was originally
Microbiological pollution. There are various bacteria, viruses, fungi - they are in any water,
but sometimes their concentration becomes dangerous for people and especially children,
because children take into their mouths and swallow any water - from a bath, a pond,
a pool. ... without thinking about the danger.
Not all bacteria are dangerous, but there are cases when coliform and thermotolerant bacteria
get into the water from sewage or old communications. In this case,
the water must be purified using
UV disinfection, strong oxidizer or reverse osmosis. 
The presence of microorganisms is determined by bacteriological analysis of water,
which is not carried out in every laboratory.









Recent Posts

  • "Living" and "Dead" Water: What Is It Really?
    3. Feb 2026
  • Do you need a water filter? How to avoid buying too much?
    23. Aug 2025


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